Hopefully the title has grabbed the attention of those who could help and/or point me in the right direction here.
Myself and my siblings were sent a Claim Form from the County Court Money Claims Centre. It was a claim from a solicitor we had dis-instructed a year previously but who then popped up with an invoice for circa £15K a few months later. Whilst we personally believe they are are owed nothing and were prepared to defend the claim, our Legal Insurance Co has agreed to indemnify us for this and instructed a legal practice to reach a settlement. So we all filed our Acknowledgment of Service and the negotiations commenced.
A Settlement figure has now been agreed. It is not for the full amount originally claimed but close to and is nevertheless agreed. The solicitor has now proposed that we enter into a Tomlin Order and sent through a draft. Meanwhile, back at the County Court Money Claim Centre, they have advised that all they have on the claim reference is the original claim form and the acknowledgement of service. We are weeks away from it being a full year since the claim was lodged by the solicitor and the Claim Centre were/are all but about to archive it away. They have said if we have settled it out of court, all they need is a letter from the solicitor instructing the case to be closed and it will be. They said a Tomlin Order was a very heavy handed way of dealing with this.
My understanding of a Tomlin Order is it sets out a settlement procedure with the ability for the claimant to continue the claim if the settlement terms are breached. Given it is a claim for money, we have reached a settlement figure and the insurance company is ready to transfer this in full, what is the point of the Tomlin order? Surely we can draw up some sort of agreement between us and the solicitor, then have the solicitor write to the Claims Centre and instruct the claim to be closed as soon as the monies are transferred.
Why am I being fussy here? Well:
1. we don't trust the solicitor not to use the Tomlin order in some (unknown) way to have a continued threat hanging over us. He has caused all sorts of problems in other matters (our new solicitor thinks we have a genuine case to complain to the Solicitors Regulation Authority about his behaviour) and we don't want to have the claim stayed, under terms which are at his whim to be deemed broken, such that he can cause us more of an issue by having the claim re-opened, even though a settlement figure has been agreed and paid in full. (It is the sort of thing he would do just to mess us around as we would have to prove we had not broken such terms, such as not disclose the settlement to anyone - how does one prove that?)
2. We just want the claim to be closed(?) and all record of any claim expunged from any such system that exists so in the future none of us have this being able to be searched for and/or re-appearing in some fashion to affect our future personal financial arrangements
Unfortunately, the legal practice appointed by our insurance company just want, like the insurance company, to get on and wrap this up. They are not too fussed about our future records (neither of them will be around in person to clean that up if it occurred).
Can anyone give me any ideas or direction on what to do?
With thanks in advance for any thoughts, pointers, ideas or solutions.
Myself and my siblings were sent a Claim Form from the County Court Money Claims Centre. It was a claim from a solicitor we had dis-instructed a year previously but who then popped up with an invoice for circa £15K a few months later. Whilst we personally believe they are are owed nothing and were prepared to defend the claim, our Legal Insurance Co has agreed to indemnify us for this and instructed a legal practice to reach a settlement. So we all filed our Acknowledgment of Service and the negotiations commenced.
A Settlement figure has now been agreed. It is not for the full amount originally claimed but close to and is nevertheless agreed. The solicitor has now proposed that we enter into a Tomlin Order and sent through a draft. Meanwhile, back at the County Court Money Claim Centre, they have advised that all they have on the claim reference is the original claim form and the acknowledgement of service. We are weeks away from it being a full year since the claim was lodged by the solicitor and the Claim Centre were/are all but about to archive it away. They have said if we have settled it out of court, all they need is a letter from the solicitor instructing the case to be closed and it will be. They said a Tomlin Order was a very heavy handed way of dealing with this.
My understanding of a Tomlin Order is it sets out a settlement procedure with the ability for the claimant to continue the claim if the settlement terms are breached. Given it is a claim for money, we have reached a settlement figure and the insurance company is ready to transfer this in full, what is the point of the Tomlin order? Surely we can draw up some sort of agreement between us and the solicitor, then have the solicitor write to the Claims Centre and instruct the claim to be closed as soon as the monies are transferred.
Why am I being fussy here? Well:
1. we don't trust the solicitor not to use the Tomlin order in some (unknown) way to have a continued threat hanging over us. He has caused all sorts of problems in other matters (our new solicitor thinks we have a genuine case to complain to the Solicitors Regulation Authority about his behaviour) and we don't want to have the claim stayed, under terms which are at his whim to be deemed broken, such that he can cause us more of an issue by having the claim re-opened, even though a settlement figure has been agreed and paid in full. (It is the sort of thing he would do just to mess us around as we would have to prove we had not broken such terms, such as not disclose the settlement to anyone - how does one prove that?)
2. We just want the claim to be closed(?) and all record of any claim expunged from any such system that exists so in the future none of us have this being able to be searched for and/or re-appearing in some fashion to affect our future personal financial arrangements
Unfortunately, the legal practice appointed by our insurance company just want, like the insurance company, to get on and wrap this up. They are not too fussed about our future records (neither of them will be around in person to clean that up if it occurred).
Can anyone give me any ideas or direction on what to do?
With thanks in advance for any thoughts, pointers, ideas or solutions.
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